Insidious: The Red Door has hit big at the box office, making double its budget over opening weekend. According to Variety, the horror sequel, which reportedly cost around $16 million to produce, beat estimations by pulling in $32.6 million across its first three days in North American theaters.
The new film, which marks the first installment in the Insidious series, beat out Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny, too, as the latter's attendance dropped 56% from its $60 million opening weekend. The Harrison Ford-led follow-up made $26.5 million, and in comparison, cost $300 million to make. So far, the Disney outing is said to have racked up $247.9 in ticket sales worldwide.
Insidious: The Red Door also fared well at the international box office with $31.4 million, ranking as the biggest overseas opening for a horror movie since early 2020.
Set nine years after the events of Insidious: Chapter 2, Insidious 5 sees Josh (Patrick Wilson, who also directed the flick) and his son Dalton (Ty Simpkins) attempt to reconnect with their past – and each other – when they find themselves plagued by terrifying visions. As viewers, we know it's the twosome's connection to The Further, an alternate dimension filled with malevolent spirits, that is being reawakened, but given the hypnosis they underwent at the end of Chapter 2, things aren't so immediately obvious to the haunted pair.
"I knew I would want to unpack the second movie and make it sort of like, 'Boyhood in the horror world'," Wilson previously told GamesRadar+. "I wanted to go back and explore what happens to a family after that, to a relationship, to a marriage.
"I also wanted to explore the relationship of a father and son, even though I don't have that kind of
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